Walsh Library
Gallery
presents
Therese Mitchell
Photographs of New York in the 1930’s and 40’s
Illuminated by the Writing of Joseph Mitchell
Wednesday, May 10th through Friday, July 14th, 2006
Opening Reception, Saturday, May 13th 5 - 7pm
Curated by Nora Mitchell Sanborn
Sponsored by
The G.K. Chesterton Institute
for Faith and Culture
with generous support from
The Earhart Foundation
Produced in concert with the one day symposium
"Joseph Mitchell and the Free Life"
Sunday, May 13th, 2006 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
to register call 973-275-2525
Perhaps no 20th - century writer has captured the life of
everyday and out-of-the way New York City as did Joseph Mitchell. In the dozens
of stories he filed with the New Yorker from 1938 to 1964, Joe Mitchell - a
native of North Carolina - managed to capture the city’s soul from the Bowery
and South Street to North Gowanus and Sandy Ground. Many of those stories were
published in four collections, the first in 1943 and the latest in 1965, but as
they went out of print, Joe Mitchell’s writings became a secret too well kept.
Fortunately, thanks to their 1992 republication between the covers of one book,
Up in the Old Hotel and the 1996 re-issue of Joe Gould’s Secret and the release
of the movie of the same name in 2000, Joe Mitchell’s stories are no longer a
secret.
But another of Joe Mitchell’s secrets is only now being uncovered. During the
1930’s and 40’s, while Joe captured the city in writing, his wife, Therese,
captured many of the same places on film. Not long ago, the Mitchells’ daughter,
Nora, found her mother’s negatives and developed them using her mother’s
photographic equipment. Prints from those negatives are now on exhibit here for
the public to discover.
Therese Mitchell’s photographs capture the human moments of the city’s life,
some long since vanished, others still familiar: a man writing the day’s menu on
the glass of a restaurant window; a wig workers’ labor demonstration; workmen
eating their lunch under a torn poster advertising Heinz soup; striking
Ohrbach’s department store employees; people trying to survive hard times. In
the immediacy of the images and their focus on the humanity of their subjects,
Therese Mitchell’s photographs mirror the written images in Joe Mitchell’s
stories.
Gallery Hours - Monday through Thursday 10:30 - 4:30
Fridays by appointment only
For further information on this exhibition, please contact the Walsh Library
Gallery at 973-275-2033.
Visit our website at
http://library.shu.edu/gallery
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